The migrator will then run and move all the data that can be migrated to the new system. It will also turn off Nepomuk at the end of the migration.

At this moment it would be safe to remove the nepomuk related packages like nepomuk-core, libnepomukwidgets, soprano*, strigi, virtuoso and shared-desktop-ontologies. There are only a few packages left that are still requiring the nepomuk-framework (like bangarang, kweshtunotes, etc).

I have -semantic-desktop in my make.conf. Adding -kdepim and -nepomuk doesn't seem to make any further difference for me.

Having unmerged neopmuk the next world update wants to bring it back._________________

Quote:

"We migrated key functions from Windows to Linux because we needed an operating system that was stable and reliable" - United Space Alliance, which manages the computer systems for the International Space Station (ISS).

Well, fix your system. I have already posted a relevant command for the investigation._________________backend.cpp:92:2: warning: #warning TODO - this error message is about as useful as a cooling unit in the arctic

"We migrated key functions from Windows to Linux because we needed an operating system that was stable and reliable" - United Space Alliance, which manages the computer systems for the International Space Station (ISS).

Of course emerging kmail will pull in kdepim, what do you expect - look at your output, do you see any of the flags? Also, you are on the wrong version (4.12.5) to join the discussion here, nepomuk and kdepim flags don't exist there.

I thought this was about (getting rid of) nepomuk? Then next thing you come up with is kmail, a kdepim application, whose kdepim dependency you expect to get rid of? _________________backend.cpp:92:2: warning: #warning TODO - this error message is about as useful as a cooling unit in the arctic

That was precisely my point, ie. the useflag wasn't holding back the install. Didn't realise I was on the wrong version though, so my sincere apologies _________________

Quote:

"We migrated key functions from Windows to Linux because we needed an operating system that was stable and reliable" - United Space Alliance, which manages the computer systems for the International Space Station (ISS).